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From
a Creative Texas Childhood...
Jane Danko:
"I´ve always been an artist and a collector. Drawings and crayola
paintings of the Texas-Louisiana swampland where I was raised, adorned
the walls of our home, images that my parents said I began to make when
I was four years old. My Dad said that at that same age I began to make
decorated boxes and masks, and to collect insects, evolving by the age
of seven to the collecting of snakes and frogs. These I kept in the mason
jars my Mom and grandmom Nana used for pickling and conserving, carefully
perforating the lids with little holes to allow air to enter, until my
collection outgrew the jars and took up residence in aquariums that I
decorated with little plants and rocks from the swamp, buttons, scraps
of material and lace, and whatever else I thought the inhabitants would
like.
To a Land Where Fairy Tales Come
True
My
parents said that I went out faithfully, every day, to catch the bugs
that were the favorite meal of my beloved pets. They said, too, that from
that tender age I loved the metaphors and allegories of nursery rhymes
and fairy tales, and that I always looked for meaning beyond the literal
in everything that was read to me and that I later read. Soon I began
to question the apparent in the iconography of the Church, and even looked
beyond the essential nature of my beloved swampland. And from that East
Texas swamp, having come a long way around, I find myself in this new
millennium in Spain, married to a bone-deep Galician, still drawing, painting,
making things, and collecting. During these years in Galicia, my interest
and fascination for simbols has remained a constant, and my work has gone
on a path of prehistoric themes, mythology, petroglifs, and symbology,
so abundant in this land, nestled in the bosom of Galicia like mounted
jewels in the silent, ageless rocks of the Gallego landscape.
After a lifetime
immersed in the exploration of symbols and mythologies, I found timeless
and universal themes in these prehistoric gems, as well as private mythologies
in the stone itself, causing an almost delirious exploration of textural
possibilities in my work. At the same time, personal allegories born of
the flora and fauna of Galicia began to emerge in my imagery, many times
centering on the flower of the tojo, a plant considered sacred by the
ancient Celts and other civilizations for its long, sharp thorns. And
in many canvases I painted my love for my adopted land, a personal exegesis
of the gallego landscape, especially the streets and surroundings of Cedeira,
the town where I´ve found so much happiness.
But even
while this happy romance continued, I began to feel a discomfort with
my work, a disquiet I was at a loss to explain. Something was missing
from my imagery; something intuited, almost palpable, in earlier years,
was no longer there. I continued to feel, and still do, a connection with,
an allegiance to the powerful talismans that prehistoric peoples left
in the stones of Galicia. But even by virtue of these gems, I had not
found the connection to ........ what? The more I wondered, the more questions,
nebulous and without form, swam around in my head.
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The
Beginning: An Application to a Workshop
Then, in April 2005, I submitted my application to the renowned Basque
artist Agustin Ibarrola, to participate in the workshop that he was to
give in the Contemporary Arts Museum of Union Fenosa in A Coruna.
Nineteen artists were chosen to participate, and I was one of them. We
spent two glorious weeks with him and painting, sculpting, working intensely,
transforming discarded industrial scrap in the warehouse yards of the
Union Fenosa electrical power company into works of art. We created
so many pieces that our mentor requested another warehouse to store and
exhibit our work, which he was immediately given. The days passed, and
we alternated seamlessly between hours of hard work to somehow finding
ourselves gathered around Agustin, listening to his wisdom while he shared
with us his ideas and theories of art, his days and years in prison during
the Franco dictatorship, his philosophy and reflections on being human
and the importance of life....... then suddenly he would send us back
to work and without blinking we would return to our artmaking.
The maestro,
who celebrated his 75th birthday with us, was always in our midst, every
day, watching as we worked, explaining and demonstrating on the makeshift
blackboard all of the formal elements of art that eluded us, and talking
to each of us, individually, while we worked. The first few times he approached
me were almost frightening, because of the tremendous respect I have for
him, but before long I was anticipating and longing for our private conversations
about my work. What did he tell me? That he loved the textures in my work,
but that I needed more variety of texture across the surface of the image.
That my use of expressionistic line was very 'juicy,'and to hold onto
it. There was much in my work that he liked, but he always ended with,
'More forceful.'But, how? 'Look and you will see.'
From the
beginning, he prohibited us from using our usual imagery or ways of working.
I almost despaired of ever understanding him. He told me, 'It´s
not that you should discard the imagery that has blossomed out of your
new life in Spain, but you have to look into your gut and find the images
of the lands that are yours from your roots, and give those images a place
beside what has come out of you here.'“But, how? 'You have to find
that for yourself. Look in the materials here, search in your gut.'
Art, at Its Best,
Is Childs' Play
With another artist, Mercedes López Peón, I took a walk
around the scrap piles, looking at what was available for our use: industrial
spools of all sizes, that in their time had transported electric cables;
computer parts; huge and small wooden planks; junk pieces of metal of
every shape and size; and wooden boxes of every dimension imaginable.
Then, seeing a box that, if we placed it vertically, we could both almost
fit inside, I said, “When I was a little girl I used to love to
trace my playmates's forms with chalk on the sidewalk, and for them to
trace me. If we were to trace each other inside this box...?” We
painted the box black, got inside and, laughing, bumping, and colliding
with each other and with the walls of the box, we each traced the other.
We painstakingly incorporated all possible formal precepts that our mentor
had taught us on the blackboard, as well as sharing with each other suggestions
from our private conversations with him: the continuing of a line from
a vertical plane onto a horizontal one; the placement and relationship
of planes, the transcendence of line...... And so, Mercedes and I relived
the lessons of our mentor, discussing his formal and informal theories
of artmaking; we traced, we painted, barely able to move, giggling, sweating,
feeling the intimacy of our pressed together bodies, laughing, in a collaboration
between formal elements of art and the innocence of our childhood, and
the work became delicious play.
We continued
to work together on other pieces, using the discarded materials around
us, learning, from both the maestro and from the very materials he urged
us to use, about the value of process without permanence, even to the
making of a “sculpture of tons”: All 20 of the artists who
participated in the workshop collaborated on a monumental sculpture, using
the massive concrete blocks stored in the area around the warehouses,
painting them and directing their placement by means of a crane in one
of the central plazas of Union Fenosa.
Awakening
the Creative Wellspring
And so, in that almost unbearable heat of July in A Coruna, in the industrial
warehouses and scrapyards of Union Fenosa, images began to spring
out of me, so rapidly that I had no time to think or understand what was
happening, images condensed into a simbology born of my own viscera, of
my childhood in the swamp of East Texas, of my adolescence among the pyramids
and temples of Mexico, of my years in Chile, of my pain for the condition
of women in the world, of my anguish during the long and tragic illness
and death of Jim Danko, of my doubts of faith, and of my belief in a feminine
Goddess. It was as though Augustin Ibarrola had caused the deepest part
of my being to come out, kicking and fighting, to take form, ripping image
after image from my gut, images born of the roots that anchor me to the
earth on both sides of the ocean. I began to paint one of the wooden spools,
thinking to convert it into a table for my home, for our orchard, as a
wedding anniversary gift for my husband. I painted silhouettes, giving
form to nothing more than the essence of feminine contours, as if they
had been traced on a sidewalk. From the hands of some, reflecting the
good humor with which my husband teases me for gesturing so much with
my hands when I talk, simbols for speech used by the ancient civilization
of Teotihuacán somersaulted out, and from the hands of others,
spirals and Celtic suns. From that moment on, the work and the images
continued to spill out like white water rapids, and at night in my room
in the hostal, I filled page after page of my sketchbook.
The
Process of Creation
Simbology has always been my central motif; the exploration of symbols
gives my work its raison d´etre. Through my work I try to intuit
that which is not so easily articulated, but which clearly exists in our
primordial collective memory, because when we see it we recognize it.
I think that it is through simbols that we approach the door to the beyond,
because of the intuition that symbols stimulate and liberate in us, giving
us entrance to the essence of both the physical and the ephemeral, as
indeed the people of prehistory achieved through their petroglifs and
paintings, perhaps also in an attempt to open the door to what lies beyond.
The
search for the essencial, coupled with reverence for the vitality of nature,
is my joy, and the entrance into my viscera that Agustín Ibarrola
opened for me consecrates my journey as pure process, without goals or
worries: the process of creation."
View
artwork by Jane Danko at the Union Fenosa Contemporary Arts Museum
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